Live to Work, Work to Live, and Work as a Necessary Evil: An Examination of the Structure and Stability of Work Ethic Profiles

Author:

Woehr David J.1,Arciniega Luis M.2ORCID,González Luis3,Stanley Laura J.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Management, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, NC, USA

2. Business Department, ITAM, Mexico City, Mexico

3. Department of Social Psychology and Anthropology, University of Salamanca, Spain

Abstract

The goal of the present study is twofold. First, we take a person-centered approach to individual differences in work ethic. Here, we focus on the identification and stability of profiles of work ethic dimensions across individuals from two relatively diverse samples. Second, we examine the extent to which work ethic profile membership influences which characteristics of an ideal coworker are viewed as most important. To assess our hypotheses, we used a diverse US-based sample of 2440 as well as a sample of 692 employees in sales-related positions in the financial sector in Mexico. Results from a series of latent profile analyses (LPAs) clearly support the idea that from the combination of scores on the seven dimensions of work ethic, clear and reliable profiles emerge and were generalizable across samples. The three profiles were identified as “Live to Work,” “Work to Live,” and “Work as a Necessary Evil.” Significant differences were found in 5 of 11 desired attributes of an ideal coworker between the employees in the three emerging profiles. Also, in line with our hypotheses, results show that employees belonging to the profile with the highest scores on the core dimensions of the work ethic construct reported that the top desired characteristic in an ideal peer is the hard worker attribute.

Funder

Asociación Mexicana de Cultura A.C.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Applied Psychology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)

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